DuffyM.E.A critique of cultural education in nursing.J Adv Nurs2001; 36(4): 487–495.
2.
NyatangaB.Culture, palliative care and multiculturalism.Int J Palliat Nurs2002; 8(5): 240–246.
3.
DeinS.Culture and cancer care: anthropological insights in oncology.Maidenhead: Open University Press; 2006.
4.
GeertzC.The interpretation of cultures.New York: Basic Books; 1973.
5.
MendykaB.E.Exploring culture in nursing: a theory-driven practice.Hol Nurs Prac2000; 15(1): 32–41.
6.
KleinmanA., BensonP.Anthropology in the clinic: cultural competency and how to fix it.Public Lib Sci Med2006; 3(10): e294.
7.
RosaldoR.Culture and Truth. The remaking of social analysis.Boston: Beacon Press; 1993.
8.
GoodB.J.Medicine, rationality, and experience. An anthropological perspective.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1994.
9.
LockM.Twice dead: organ transplants and the reinvention of death.Berkeley: University of California Press; 2002.
10.
AhmadW.I.U.The trouble with culture. In KelleherD., & HillierS. (Eds.) Researching cultural inequalities in health.London: Routledge; 1996.
11.
LunaL., CameronC.Leininger's transcultural nursing, in Conceptual models of nursing: analysis and applications (eds. FitzpatrickJ.J., & WhallA.L.). Norwalk, Connecticut: Appleton & Lange; 1989.
12.
KleinmanA., BensonP.Culture, moral experience and medicine.Mt Sinai J Med2006; 73(6): 834–839.
13.
MacdonaldM.E., CarnevaleF.A., RazackS.Understanding what residents want and what residents need: the challenge of cultural training in pediatrics.Med Teacher2007; 29(5): 465–471.
14.
Kagawa-SingerM., BlackhallL.J.Negotiating cross-cultural issues at the end of life.J Am Geriatr Soc2001; 286(23): 2993–3000.
15.
TongE., McGrawS.A., DobihalE.What is a good death? Minority and non-minority perspectives.J Palliat Care2003; 19(3): 168–175.
16.
WalterT.Historical and cultural variants on the good death.BMJ2003; 327(7408): 218–220.
17.
SeymourJ.Critical moments – death and dying in intensive care.Buckingham: Open University Press; 2001.
18.
SmajeC., FieldD.Absent minorities? Ethnicity and the use of palliative care services. In Death, Gender and Ethnicity (Eds. FieldD., HockeyJ., SmallN.). London: Routledge; 1997.
19.
KempC.Cultural issues in palliative care.Semin Oncol Nurs2005; 21(1): 44–52.
20.
SchilderA.J., KennedyC., GoldstoneI.L.“Being dealt with as a whole person.” Care seeking and adherence: the benefits of culturally competent care.Soc Sci Med2001; 52(11): 1643–1649.
21.
DreherM., MacNaughtonN.Cultural competence in nursing: foundation or fallacy?Nurs Outlook2002; 50(5): 181–186.
22.
GunaratnamY.Culture is not enough. A critique of multiculturalism in palliative care. In Death, Gender and Ethnicity (Eds. FieldD., HockeyJ., SmallN.). London: Routledge; 1997.
23.
FoxR.C.Cultural competence and the culture of medicine.N Engl J Med2005; 353(13): 1316–1319.
24.
Delvecchio-GoodM-J, JamesC., GoodB.J.The culture of medicine and racial, ethnic, and class disparities in healthcare in unequal treatment: confronting racial and ethnic disparities in health care.Washington, DC: National Academies Press; 2003.
25.
HeylandD.K., LaveryJ.V., TranmerJ.E.Dying in Canada: is it an institutionalized, technologically supported experience?J Palliat Care2000; 16(Supp): S10–S16.
LuddingtonL., CoxS., HigginsonI., LivesleyB.The need for palliative care for patients with non-cancer diseases: a review of the evidence.Int J Palliat Nurs2001; 7(5): 221–226.
28.
Canadian Institute for Health Information, Health Care Use at the End of Life in Western Canada.Ottawa: CIHI; 2007.
29.
RosenwaxL.K., McNamaraB.A.Who receives specialist palliative care in Western Australia – and who misses out.Palliat Med2006; 20(4): 439–445.
30.
HarperB.C.Report from the National Task Force on Access to Hospice Care by minority groups.Hospice J2005; 10(2): 1–9.
31.
KarimK., BaileyM., TunnaK.Nonwhite ethnicity and the provision of specialist palliative care services: factors affecting doctors’ referral patterns.Palliat Med2000; 14(6): 471–478.
32.
GreinerK.A., PereraS., AhluwaliaJ.S.Hospice usage by minorities in the last year of life: results from the National Mortality Followback Survey.J Am Geriatr Soc2003; 51(7): 970–978.
33.
KleinmanA.Writing at the margin: discourse between anthropology and medicine.Berkeley: University of California Press; 1995.
34.
GainesA.D., Davis-FloydR.On biomedicine, in Encyclopedia of medical anthropology, (eds. Carol, and EmberMelvin). Yale: Human Relations Area Files; 2003.
35.
GordonD.R.Tenacious assumptions in western medicine, in Biomedicine examined (eds. LockM., & GordonD.). Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers; 1988.
36.
TaylorJ.S.Confronting “culture” in medicine's “Culture of no culture”.Acad Med2003; 78(6): 555–559.
37.
RhodesL.A.Studying biomedicine as a cultural system, in Medical anthropology: contemporary theory and method (eds. SargentC.F., & JohnsonT.M.). Westport, Connecticut: Praeger; 1986.
GubaE.G., LincolnY.S.Competing paradigms in qualitative research, in DenzinN.K., & LincolnY.S. (Eds.). Handbook of qualitative research.Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications; 1994. p. 105–117.
40.
KleinmanA.The illness narratives: suffering, healing and the human condition.New York: Basic Books; 1988.
41.
Delvecchio-GoodM-JAmerican medicine: the quest for competence.Berkeley: The University of California Press; 1995.
42.
FieldM.J., CassellC.Approaching death: improving care at the end-of-life.Washington, DC: National Academy Press; 1997.
43.
CassellE.J.The nature of suffering and the goals of medicine.Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1994.
44.
EngebretsonJ.A multiparadigm approach to nursing.Adv Nurs Sci1997; 20(1): 21–33.
45.
GottliebL., FeeleyN.The collaborative partnership approach to care: a delicate balance.Toronto: Mosby Elsevier; 2006.
46.
WatsonJ.Nursing. The philosophy and science of caring. Revised & Updated Edition.Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 2007.
47.
BoeschmaG.The meaning of holism in nursing: historical shifts in holistic nursing ideas.Public Health Nurs,1994; 11(5): 324–330.
48.
FifeB.L.The conceptualization of meaning in illness.Soc Sci Med1994; 38(2): 309–316.
49.
DonnellyE.Culture and the meanings of cancer.Semin Oncol Nurs1995; 11(1): 3–8.
50.
BenzeinE., NorbergA., SavemanB.The meaning of the lived experience of hope in patients with cancer in palliative home care.Palliat Med2001; 15(2): 117–26.
51.
LeeV., CohenS.R., EdgarL.Meaning-making intervention during breast or colorectal cancer treatment improves self-esteem, optimism, and self-efficacy.Soc Sci Med2006; 62(12): 3133–4.
52.
TervalonM., Murray-GarciaJ.Cultural humility versus cultural competence: a critical distinction in defining physicians training outcomes in multicultural education.J Healthcare Poor Underserved1998; 9(2): 117–125.
53.
ClarkD.The development of palliative medicine in the UK and Ireland, in Textbook of palliative medicine (eds. Bruera). London: Hodder Arnold; 2006.
54.
ClarkD., SeymourJ.Reflections on palliative care.Buckingham: Open University Press; 1999.
55.
McNamaraB.Fragile lives: death, dying and care.Buckingham: Open University Press; 2001.
56.
HartB., SainsburyP., ShortS.Whose dying?A sociological critique of the “good death.” Mortal1998; 3(1): 65–77.
57.
McNamaraB.Good enough death: autonomy and choice in Australian palliative care.Soc Sci Med2004; 58(5): 929–938.
58.
McNamaraB., WaddellC., ColvinM.Threats to the good death: the cultural context of stress and coping among hospice nurses.Soc Health Illness1995; 17(2): 222–244.
59.
BorbasiS., WottonK., ReddenM.Letting go: a qualitative study of acute care and community nurses’ perceptions of a “good”’ versus a “bad” death.Aust Crit Care2006; 18(3): 104–113.
60.
TurnerL.From the local to the global: bioethics and the concept of culture.J Med Philos2005; 30(3): 305–320.
61.
Scott-FindlayS., EstabrooksC.A.Mapping the organizational culture research in nursing: a literature review, J Adv Nurs2006; 56(5), 498–513.
62.
CassellJ.Life and death in intensive care.Philadelphia: Temple University Press; 2005.
63.
SUPPORT Principal Investigators.A controlled trial to improve care of seriously ill hospitalized patients. The study to understand prognoses and preferences for outcomes and risks of treatment (SUPPORT).JAMA1995; 274: 1591–1598.
64.
LoB.End-of-life care after termination of SUPPORT.Hastings Cent Rep1995; 25(6): S6–S9.
65.
HopkinsonJ.B., HallettC.E., LukerK.A.Caring for dying people in hospital.J Adv Nurs2003; 44(5): 525–533.
66.
CostelloJ.Nursing older dying patients: findings from an ethnographic study of death and dying in elderly care wards.J Adv Nurs2001; 35(1): 59–68.
67.
OberleK., HughesD.Doctors’ and nurses’ perceptions of ethical problems in end-of-life decisions.J Adv Nurs2001; 33(6): 707–715.
68.
WottonK., BorbasiS., ReddenM.When all else has failed: nurses’ perception of factors influencing palliative care for patients with end-stage heart failure.J Cardio Nurs2005; 20(1), 18–25.